Evaluate int_0^(oo) (sin^2(t))/(t^2) dt with help of Laplace transform

Finn Mosley

Finn Mosley

Answered question

2022-11-24

Evaluate 0 sin 2 ( t ) t 2 d t with help of Laplace transform
Using the following identity
0 f ( t ) t d t = 0 L { f ( t ) } ( u ) d u
I rewrote
0 sin 2 ( t ) t 2 d t
as
0 sin 2 ( t ) t t d t
And thus the initial integral should be easily evaluated as
0 L { sin 2 t t } ( u ) d u
According to my calculations, this is equal to
0 ( 1 4 ln ( u 2 + 4 ) u 2 4 ) d u
Which evaluates to π 16 . Being that this acutally a well-known integral and that its value is actually π 2 I think that I made a crucial mistake somewhere. Any ideas?

Answer & Explanation

Addison Mueller

Addison Mueller

Beginner2022-11-25Added 10 answers

You seemed to have confused logarithmic identities. The integrand should be
1 4 log ( 4 s 2 + 1 )
which indeed evaluates as π / 2. I am guessing you wrongly factored out an s 2
siotaody

siotaody

Beginner2022-11-26Added 1 answers

We have
0 sin 2 t t e u t = 1 2 0 1 cos t t e ( u / 2 ) t d t = 1 2 log ( ( u / 2 ) 2 + 1 ( u / 2 ) 2 ) = 1 2 log ( u 2 + 4 u 2 )

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

New Questions in Force, Motion and Energy

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?